Monday, July 23, 2007

The Open Library Makes Its Online Debut

"The Open Library Makes Its Online Debut"
"Imagine a library that collected all the world's information
about all the world's books and made it available for everyone
to view and update," write members of the Internet Archive's
Open Content Alliance. "We're building that library." And now
the alliance has put a demo version of that library online. The
Open Library is meant to serve as a vast digital card catalog,
and Web surfers will be able to edit entries, much like in
Wikipedia. The repository will also collect books in the public
domain, a mission that will bring the library into competition
with Google's much-publicized book-scanning service. Some
critics of the Google project have high hopes for the Open
Library, which seems more eager to embrace the ideals of Web
2.0. "If all goes well," writes Ben Vershbow of if:book, "it's
conceivable that this could become the main destination on the
Web for people looking for information in and about books."
That's still a big if: The library will rely heavily on
contributions from unpaid volunteers. But the Open Library has
at least one thing going for it, according to Mr. Vershbow: "On
presentation of public-domain texts, they already have Google
beat." The library offers books in a number of different file
formats, including a "flip book" tool that attempts to simulate
the experience of rifling through a hardbound tome. "This sort
of re-enactment of paper functionality is perhaps too literal,"
writes Mr. Vershbow, but he admits that it makes for a pretty
decent reading experience. The Open Library plans to unveil a
fuller site in October, and project officials will have to do
plenty of work to meet that deadline. They plan to create an
entry for every book ever published, not just digitized books in
the public domain. --Brock Read
From The Wired Campus
http://chronicle.com/wiredcampus/index.php?id=2235

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